News, 4 August 2000
Following the demise in the current British parliamentary session of
the Medical Treatment (Prevention of Euthanasia) Bill, its sponsor has
vowed to re-introduce it when parliament resumes in November. Ann
Winterton said: "... it has achieved a great deal in publicising the
issue and has sent a clear signal to both the British Medical
Association and the Government that euthanasia, whether by action or
omission, is unacceptable to the people of this country." [Catholic
Herald, 4 August]
The English Court of Appeal has reduced the prison sentences of three
people found guilty of assaulting doctors in saving the life of David
Glass, their severely disabled nephew. Diane Wild's sentence was
reduced from 12 months to six months, while Julie Hodgson and Raymond
Davies each had their sentences cut from nine months to four months.
Doctors had put David Glass on diamorphine, which depressed his
breathing, and admitted that the boy would have died were it not for
the actions of his relatives. The appeal court judge insisted that the
shortening of the sentences was in consideration of David's care and
did not imply that the original judgement had been wrong or excessive.
A spokesman for Alert, an anti-euthanasia group, asked, "If doctors are
free to arrange their patients' deaths and no-one may stop them, why
was Dr Shipman [a mass-murderer] convicted for making this 'hard
decision' 15 times over?" [Catholic Herald, 4 August; also cf. SPUC
News Digest for 4 July]
The new president of Argentina has affirmed his opposition to abortion
and said that his country will adopt a pro-life stand at international
conferences. After a private meeting with Archbishop Santos Abril y
Castello, apostolic nuncio to Argentina, President Fernando De La Rua
said: "I don't know if I will be just like the former president, but
what I can say is that this president is against abortion. As head of
the government, I will shape the nation's international policy
accordingly." Concerns had been raised after the Argentine delegation
for the first time in 10 years had failed to take an outspoken pro-life
stand at the recent Beijing +5 UN meeting in New York. [CWNews, 3
August]
George W Bush briefly included mention of the abortion issue in his
51-minute speech to the Republican party's national convention
yesterday, by which he accepted his party's nomination as candidate for
the US presidential election in November. He conceded that "good people
disagree on the issue" but also reaffirmed his commitment to sign a
bill banning partial-birth abortions. [Reuters, Yahoo! News, 4 August]
Canadian scientists have developed a technique which they say could
enable unborn babies to receive safe vaccinations. Dr Philip Griebel of
Saskatchewan University hoped that DNA could be used to produce
vaccines of just one gene which could be injected into an unborn child
without the risks associated with conventional vaccines. Millions of
newly born children every year die from disease, especially in the
developing world. Yet Dr Rob Feldman of Microscience, a British company
which produces vaccines, warned of the risks involved in passing any
needle into an unborn child. The amniocentesis test, in which a needle
enters the amniotic sac but not the unborn child, carries a one per
cent chance of miscarriage. If the needle passes into the unborn child
as well, the risk is increased further. [Daily Mail, 1 August; BBC News
Online, 2 August] The way in which DNA could be used to produce a
vaccine is not made clear in the sources cited.
A federal court in the US has thrown out a law passed in Louisiana
which required abortion clinics to be subject to the same licences and
inspections as surgical facilities. District Judge Ivan Lemelle made
permanent an order originally given last year stipulating that abortion
clinics are not outpatient surgical centres. The state has not yet
decided whether to appeal. An attorney who represented three Louisiana
abortion clinics said: "The state can no longer trample on women's
constitutional rights by imposing unnecessary regulations on abortion
facilities." [New Orleans, Digital City, 4 August]
To subscribe to SPUC's email information services, please visit www.spuc.org.uk/em-signup. The reliability of the news herein is dependent on that of the cited sources, which are paraphrased rather than quoted. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the society. © Society for the Protection of Unborn Children, 2012